Flora of Seaford Head in August Part 1

Hope Gap

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2022-02-13 | 12:05h
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Flora of Seaford Head in August Part 1 – Hope Gap
Wildflowers of Hope Gap

After counting Moon CarrotsAMP on Seaford Head Nature Reserve in Sussex, I kept my phone at the ready for photography and walked home slowly. This post is in two parts because I took so many photos! This part will be about Hope Bottom and the area around Hope Gap where we did the Moon Carrot survey, then Part 2 will be about the rest of the nature reserve I passed through on the way home. The area is chalk grassland with exposed clifftops.

After my training in chalk grassland indicator species in JulyAMP, I had my eye out and spotted a few. Look out for the L which means they’re on the list we were given by the National Trust. However, as usual, please remember that this blog is not a comprehensive species list – there were more present than I photographed!

Flowers on the Cliffs near Hope Gap

In the main image above, you can see the Seven Sisters cliffs in the distance, a few people remaining from the Moon Carrot survey, some Moon Carrots, and in the foreground Betony Betonica officinalis. This first batch of pictures were all taken in short grass.

Betony – Betonica officinalis formerly Stachys officinalis

Also known as Common Hedgenettle

Wild Basil – Clinopodium vulgare

Superficially similar to Betony, Wild Basil is clearly different when you see the two together. For example, the flowering habit and leaf shapes are different. L

Wild Basil – Clinopodium vulgare – Seaford Head – Aug 2021

Carline Thistle – Carlina vulgaris

It took me a while to find out what this was when I first saw it on the Kent coastAMP a couple of years ago. L

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Carline Thistle – Carlina vulgaris – Seaford Head – Aug 2021

Devils-bit Scabious – Succisa pratensis

Very pretty little globe shaped flowers. L

Devils-bit Scabious – Succisa pratensis – Seaford Head Aug 2021

Agrimony – Agrimonia eupatoria

Yellow Agrimony with pink Betony in the background.

Agrimony – Agrimonia eupatoria – Seaford Head – Aug 2021

Hairy violet – Viola hirta

Not in flower as this Viola flowers in early spring, but we had been looking out for it during the grassland surveys so I was confident in the ID. L

Hairy violet leaf – Viola hirta – Seaford Head – Aug 2021

Clustered Bellflower – Campanula glomerata

Clustered Bellflower – Campanula glomerata – Seaford Head – Aug 2021

This flower was also growing on slopes set a little way back from the cliffs on my way to Hope Bottom.

Clustered Bellflower – Campanula glomerata on slope with Lesser Knapweed and Vipers Bugloss – Seaford Head – Aug 2021

Flowers further inland around Hope Bottom

The following wildflowers were growing in longer grass in a more sheltered area a few tens of metres away from the cliffs themselves.

Yarrow – Achillea millefolium

This blue butterfly was feeding on the Yarrow, with Wild Basil nearby.

Butterfly on Yarrow – Achillea millefolium – Seaford Head – Aug 2021

Common Ragwort – Senecio jacobaea

This was such a pretty area with blues yellows and pinks. The Common Ragwort is listed as an “undesirable species” for chalk grasslands by the way. And it is also known as Stinking Willie apparently.

Meadow of Ragwort, Vipers Bugloss, Agrimony and Wild Basil – Seaford Head – Aug 2021

Vipers Bugloss – Echium vulgare

Meadow of Ragwort, Vipers Bugloss, Agrimony and Wild Basil – Seaford Head – Aug 2021

Wild parsnip – Pastinaca sativa

Meadow of Wild parsnip, Wild Basil, Lesser Knapweed, Agrimony and Self Heal – Seaford Head – Aug 2021
Wild parsnip – Pastinaca sativa – Seaford Head – Aug 2021

Red Bartsia – Odontites vernus

What a beautiful parasite.

Red Bartsia – Odontites vernus – Seaford Head – Aug 2021

Silverweed leaves – Potentilla anserina

I’m very familiar with Silverweed as I sometimes sell it as a pressed flower in my dried flowers shop daisyshop.co.uk. This Potentilla has yellow flowers, so don’t be distracted by the Red Bartsia growing through it!

Silverweed leaves – Potentilla anserina – Seaford Head – Aug 2021

Wild Teasel – Dipsacus fullonium

Wild Teasel – Dipsacus fullonium – Seaford Head – Aug 2021

Great willowherb – Epilobium hirsutum

I love this large blousy plant with its four-lobed stigma (the white piece dangling from inside the flower).

Great willowherb – Epilobium hirsutum – Seaford Head – Aug 2021

I think the sheer number of flowers spotted is related to the fact that it was quite a wet spring and summer. I continued my walkAMP back towards some short grass where I found many more wildflowers including more chalk grassland indicator species.

Here’s a Sussex Wildlife Trust map of the nature reserve showing where you can find Hope Gap and Hope Bottom.

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